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Authors: Stanislaw Lem

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BOOK: The Star Diaries
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I read through the last paragraph, the one about the mucilid who was pilloried:

Tweye halbardeere of His Sovereyn Inductivitee kaughte, whan the oure hyt strook thre this ilke morn, oon mucilyte espye, whoo atte hostelrye of herbergeour magn. Mremran ylogged was, thynkyng ther to hyde his wikkednesse, Beeyng a feithful servaunt to H. S. Inductivitee, magn. Mremran spedily did notifie the toun Halbardeshippe, eftsoones the foule tratour, his helm agapen in grete shame, eek yhooted by the iresom crowde, in dongeoun ythrowe was, in Calefaustrium.

Not bad for a start, I thought—and turned to the column under the heading of “Alarums atte Colisseum”:

Feele bettors atte gridyrnliches tornee lefte the feeld in muche confoundrement, sith Garloy III, passyng the griddebal to Turtukoor, hadde ytombresult anon, wherat a fraktur of the knee withdrewe him fro the pley. The wajoureres, seyen hir premium forlost, bethrongged them unto the kassier, stomppelte the tingulum and sorely braste als the tingulator. The citee Halbardeshippe patrole did 8 tumultineeren in the moat yputte, al weyed doun with stoons. Whan an ende to swiches sory perturbaciouns bee, the kwittie bettors mekely axe th’adminystracioun?

With the help of a glossary I learned that kwittie meant calm, from
quietas, quietatis
—peace, and that axe was ask, while gridyrn represented a kind of sporting field on which the magnificans played—in their fashion—football, using for that purpose a sphere of solid lead. I studied the papers assiduously, since before take-off it had been drummed into me at division headquarters that I must acquaint myself with all the ways and customs of magnifican life—even now I called them that in my thoughts: to refer to anyone as a robot would be not only an insult, it would unmask me at once.

So I read, in turn, the following articles: “Sixe Principles As Touchinge the Parfit Estat of a Magnifycan,” “Th’Audience of Magn. Maister Gregaturian,” “How Goon the Repaires atte Armurers Guilde To-yeere,” “Deyntee Peregrinacioun of Magnificane Goostes by Cause of the Coolynge of Hyr Toobes.” But the ads were stranger yet. A good many of them I could scarcely understand.

ARMELADORA VI, HONDIMAGN FAMOUS FOR warderobe-lavanderynge, valve-ootreemerye, henge-parficciounement, also in extermis, lowe rates.

JUVENOX, salve for the remooval of rustes, rustraciouns, rustifycaciouns, rusticitees and oother plaguey rusticles. Nowe on sale.

OLEUM PURISSIMUM PRO CAPITE—Suffre nat a squekee nekke destroublen youre thynkynge!!

A few were altogether incomprehensible. These, for instance:

Art likerous? Pleye-limbes to order! Alle sysen! For securitee oon worche dounpayen. Tarmodrylle VIII.

LUXURS cubiculum omnifactorlich compleat with amphigneyss, to rente. Applie Perkulator XXV.

And there were some that made the hair stand on end underneath my iron hood:

THE BURDEL OF GOMORRHEUM
OPNETH TO-DAY ITS YATES!
OUR RESTAURACION OFFRETH
TASTEE DISSHE NE BIFOREN
FETURED!! MUCILYDE BABEE,
VITAILLE YSERVE ATTE BORDAND CARIE-OOT!!!

I racked my brains over these enigmatic texts, for which however I had ample time, inasmuch as the trip was supposed to take about a year.

In
The Outer Space Gazette
they had even more ads.

BOON-BURSTERES, FLESSHE-PERCERES, NEKKE SISOURES, CLEVERES, CORVERES, STOUTE CUGGELS? Trie GREMONTORIUS, FIDRICAX LVI.

PYROMANYAKS!!! Newe swabbes ysteped in Abracabbors specyall petro-oleum, GUARANTEYDE QUENCHE-PROVE!!

FOR STRANGELACIOUN FANSYERE. Wee mussilid thynge, swete, conne speken, in clooth ycladde, with eek oon paire fingernail-plyers, litel used, chepe.

LEDY-N-GENTILMAGNIFIKANS—The BELY-SKEWERES, Thumbe-skreweres, spyne-cheweres ARE IN!!!—Krakaruan XI.

Reading these announcements at length, I began to understand—I fancied—the fate which the host of Second Division volunteers sent forth to reconnoiter had met with. It was not, I confess, with any great degree of confidence that I landed on the planet. This was accomplished at night, I cutting the engines beforehand as much as possible. After touching down in a fairly mountainous region, I decided—upon reflection—to cover the rocket with broken branches. Really, those experts back at Intelligence hadn’t been using their heads: grain elevators, after all, were a little out of place on a robot planet. I packed the interior of my iron casing with as many provisions as I was able, then set off in the direction of the city, which I spotted in the distance thanks to the strong electrical glow that hung over it. I had to stop a couple of times to reposition some cans of sardines, for they were clattering around awfully inside. On I went, when something invisible knocked me off my feet. I fell, raising an ungodly racket and pierced with the sudden thought of “What, already?!” But there wasn’t a living—that is, an electrical—thing in the vicinity. Just in case, I pulled out my weapons: a jimmy, the kind that safe-crackers use, and a tiny screwdriver. Groping about with my hands, I found that I was surrounded only by scrap-iron shapes. The remains of ancient automata, their abandoned cemetery. I continued on my way, frequently turning around to look, amazed at its dimensions. It went on for at least a mile. Then in the darkness, quite unalleviated by the distant glow, there loomed two four-legged shapes. I froze. My instructions said nothing about animals living on this planet. Two more quadrupeds noiselessly joined the first. A careless movement from me produced a metallic clang, and the black silhouettes bolted like mad into the night.

After this incident I proceeded with redoubled caution. The time hardly seemed auspicious for entering the city—the late hour, the empty streets—my appearance would surely attract unwanted attention. So I jumped into a roadside ditch and patiently awaited the dawn, chewing on a biscuit. I knew that until the following night it would be impossible to eat a thing.

At daybreak I approached the outskirts of the city. Didn’t see a soul. On a nearby fence was a large poster, faded and washed by the rains. I walked over to it.

PROCLAMMACYON

The toun auctoritees well woot that the mucellide slyme doth ever seek to infiltreyen the honeste rankes of our magnyfycans. Harkee! Whosoever ysee a mucellid or any individuum of suspecious contenaunce, shal streghtwey go him unto the locale hallebarderye ther for to informen. Any maner collaboracioun with or eek assistenz yiven to the same wil bee ypunysshed by peyne of unscrewynge in saecula saeculorum. A prise of 1,000 pistoons on eche mucellyd hed is heere by yleyd.

I went on. The suburbs didn’t look inviting. Beside wretched, rust-eaten sheds sat groups of robots, playing odd and even. From time to time fights broke out among them, and with such a din, it sounded like artillery shelling a warehouse full of metal drums. A little farther on I came to a trolley stop. An almost empty trolley car drove up, and I climbed on. The driver was an inseparable part of the motor and had his hand permanently welded to the crank, while the conductor, screwed in place at the entrance, was also the door. He moved on hinges. I handed him a coin from the supply they’d given me at Division, and sat on a bench, creaking dreadfully. At the center of town I got off and sauntered straight ahead, as if without a worry in the world. I came across more and more halberdiers; they were walking back and forth, in groups of two and three, right down the middle of the street. Noticing a halberd propped against a wall, I carelessly picked it up and marched on, but I was alone and that might appear strange, so taking advantage of the fact that one of the three guards strutting in front of me had stepped off to the side in order to adjust his drooping grille, I filled his place in the formation. The perfect similarity of all robots stood me in good stead. As for my two companions, they maintained their silence for a time, then finally one spoke up:

“Whan wole we the ese ysee, Burbor? For I am wery and fayn wouldst sport me som with the electrolasshe.”

“What gabbestow, cherl?” replied the other. “Our stacioun delyteth thee namoor! Ho! ’Tis dreer enow, ywis!”

In this fashion we covered the entire downtown area. Keeping my eyes open, I noticed along the way two restaurants, and in front of each a veritable forest of halberds propped against the wall. However I asked no questions. By now my feet ached in earnest, and it was stifling inside that iron kettle heated by the sun, and my nose was twitching from the acrid dust—afraid I might sneeze, I tried to slip away unnoticed, but both of them howled:

“Hola, frend! Whider trippest thou ther? Wust have the bailly bat thee blatherless? Be ye mad?”

“Nay,” I answered, “I oonly thoughte to sitte me doon a spel.”

“Sitte? An has the fever brent thy coil? We are on dootee, trewe castynges of the founderye!”

“Een so,” I said, assenting, and again we marched before us. No, I thought, this occupation was totally devoid of possibilities. There had to be some other way. We made yet another round of the city, then suddenly an officer stopped us, crying:

“Raffandulum!”

“Bondamacronger!” shouted my companions. I made a mental note of that password and reply. The officer looked us over, front and back, and ordered us to hold our halberds higher.

“Fy, ye are sloggardly clunks, nat halbardeere of Hys Inductivitee!! Streghten thoos rankes! Shulders out! Hep-hep!!”

The halberdiers submitted to this inspection without comment. Then on we trudged beneath the noonday sun, and I cursed the hour that I had volunteered to set out for this miserable planet. In addition, I was famished. A rumbling stomach could easily betray me, so I tried rattling as loudly as I could. We passed a restaurant. I looked inside. Practically all the tables were occupied: magnificans, or rather clunks—as I called them in my thoughts, remembering the officer’s words—sat there motionless, enameled blue, though now and then one of them would squeak or turn its head to gaze, glass-eyed, out at the street. They ate nothing, drank nothing, but seemed only to be waiting—for what, I couldn’t guess. The waiter, recognizable by the white apron it wore over its armor, was standing by the wall.

“Perchaunce we too moot sitten yonder?” I asked, for I could feel every blister on my ironbound feet.

“In soothe thou art a sely felawe!” huffed my companions, “Swiche luxuree nys for the lykes of us! Ne, stondynge we moste remeyn alway! But fere nat, thoos ther do lay in wayte for som musilid to entryken, whan hee coom and, requerynge soope or eek gruwel, hys feendly natur there by revele!!”

Not understanding any of this, I plodded on obediently. After a while, though, I began to grow desperate—however we headed at last towards a great building of red brick, on which a wrought-iron inscription was visible:

YE BARRACKS OF THE HALLEBARDYERES
OF
HYS MYGHTY INDUCTIVITEE
CALCULON THE FYRST

I broke away from my companions at the very entrance. The halberd I left with the sentinel as it turned its back with a clank and a clang, then ducked into the first side street. Around the corner there stood a sizable building with the signboard UNDER THE AXE. I only peered inside, but the innkeeper, a pot-bellied robot with short legs and creaking eagerly, hopped out on the street.

“Wei mette, my liege, wel mette … umbly at your servyse … wol ye be a-cravinge of a roum, mayhap?”

“Yis,” I answered laconically.

He practically bore me bodily inside. Leading the way up the stairs, my host prattled on in his tinny voice like one possessed:

“No ende of peregrynatours are hiderward ycome of layte, no ende … ther is nat a magnifican, I trow, who ne desyreth hem to looke upon the corounacioun of the incandessente fillementz of Oure Inductivitee with hys owne tweye lenzen … this wey, an it please yowr lorshippe … a worthy appartamentum, arter ye prithee … her is the parloure … ther the denne … but douteles yowr Grace moste bee for-wery … the dust hit gryndeth in thy geeres … by your leve I’ll fecche som ablootemaunts anon…”

He went clattering down the stairs and, before I had much chance to look around that rather dismal room, furnished as it was with an iron chest of drawers and an equally iron bed, he returned with an oilcan, a rag, and a bottle of silicone. Placing these on the table, he said in a lower, more confidential tone:

“Whan ye hav yourselven a myte refresshened, Sire, prey betake yow doune-steyers … for gentil folke lyke youre Honour I all weys kepe a litel secreetum, somthynge swete and savory … shalt dally wel…”

And out he went, winking his photocells. Having nothing better to do, I oiled myself, polished my plates with the silicone, and noticed that the innkeeper had left on the table a card which seemed to resemble a restaurant menu. Well aware that robots never eat, I picked it up, surprised, and read
Burdel 2nd Classe
across the top.

Mussilid infaunt, decapitatus

8 pist.

The same, with goo

10 pist.

The same, wepynge

11 pist.

The same, pitous

14 pist.

Lyfstok:

Cutlette-sodomie, eche

6 pist.

Myrie choppe

8 pist.

The same, calf meke and delicaat

8 pist.

None of it made sense to me, but my blood ran cold when from the adjoining room I heard a crashing of incredible violence, as if some robot guest were endeavoring to dash his lodging into splinters against the wall. My hair stood on end. I’d had enough. Trying not to clink or clang, I fled from that dreadful den out into the street. Breathing easily only when I’d put a good distance behind me. And now what was I, poor wretch, to do? I stopped by a group of robots playing old maid and pretended to be an enthusiastic onlooker. It was still a complete mystery to me what these magnificans actually did. I could probably sneak back into the ranks of the halberdiers, but that didn’t promise much and the chance of being caught was considerable. What then?

BOOK: The Star Diaries
8.98Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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